The 2018 midterm elections are barely a month past. The current presidential term isn’t even half over. But the Iowa/New Hampshire drumroll has already begun. It will be well over a year before any votes are cast in the first caucus and primary states, yet even this far out, presidential hopefuls are traveling to Iowa and New Hampshire, maneuvering for attention and raising money. The 2020 campaign is the last thing that should be on the mind of any well-adjusted voter or journalist, but here come the headlines anyway:

The length of time the United States spends on presidential campaigns is unreal, unhealthy, and, for many of us, unbearable. No other nation puts itself through these two-year political marathons — in most democracies, national elections consume no more than a few months, and sometimes only weeks. Long before Election Day arrives, Americans routinely say they are fed up with the whole exhausting, irritating, trivializing ordeal.

Is there a way out of this? Yes: Break the Iowa/New Hampshire duopoly.

Pundits and politicos have bewailed the outsize influence of these two first-in-the-nation states for years. Because their voters get first crack at winnowing what is often a crowded field of White House hopefuls to the eventual party nominees, Iowa and New Hampshire typically set the tone for the entire primary season. Only one candidate in the past 40 years, Bill Clinton, has gone on to win the presidency after losing both states.

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The usual objection to allowing Iowa and New Hampshire to retain so much prominence is that they aren’t representative of the American electorate. Critics argue that both states are too small, too rural, too wealthy, and too white to deserve their first-in-the-nation perch. Maybe yes, maybe no — reasonable minds can debate how important it is that the first primary/caucus states be microcosms of the nation as a whole.

But the real problem with the Iowa/New Hampshire stranglehold is simply that it’s unchanging. Because the same two states always go first, candidates focus on them earlier — far earlier — than they should. They spend inordinate amounts of time in Iowa and New Hampshire, hiring staff and renting offices long before voters should have to be hectored about the next presidential election. Some candidates almost literally camp out in Iowa or New Hampshire for months. News organizations reinforce the political siege, deploying resources and reporters to concentrate on the two states.

All this has the effect of pushing the campaign’s unofficial, but all too real, starting point further and further back.

Here’s a better system:

Every four years, the Republican and Democratic parties should hold a drawing to choose two different states to go to the head of the line. Limiting the drawing to, say, the 15 smallest states would preserve the traditional “retail” campaigning that voters and candidates prize in Iowa and New Hampshire. But — this is the crucial reform — the drawing should not take place until Jan. 1 of the presidential election year.

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With no way to know in advance which states would enjoy the first-in-the-nation turn in the sun, presidential hopefuls would no longer be able to overrun those states months before any votes were cast. Ambitious politicians would continue to seek publicity, build alliances, and raise money. But they would have no reason to begin intensive presidential campaigning — holding town hall meetings, marching in local parades, knocking on voters’ doors — almost as soon as the midterms were over.

For candidates to focus closely on a couple of small states at the start of the electoral season is good discipline. There’s no reason, however, for those first-in-the-nation campaigns to last for eight or 10 months. Eight or 10 weeks is far better.

Iowa and New Hampshire have had a good long run. But the time has come to end their duopoly, and make campaigns less awful.